Invest with Values

The Investor's Gateway to Positive Change

The Investor's Gateway to Positive Change

  • RESOURCE DIRECTORY
    • GETTING STARTED
    • FULL DIRECTORY
    • Top Resources
    • Share a Resource
  • NEWS CENTER
    • NEWS CENTER
    • By Category
      • Local Banking
      • Community Investing
      • Impact Investing
      • Sustainable-Responsible Investing
      • Featured Articles
      • Beyond Investing
      • IWV news
      • Top Resources
    • News Partners
      • 3BLmedia
      • AllianceMagazine
      • CorporateKnights
      • GreenMoney
      • Locavesting
      • MaxImpact
      • InvestWithValues Sponsors
      • InvestWithValues Partners
    • Newsletter Sign-up
    • Newsletter Archive
  • About
    • About Us
    • Brian Kaminer
    • Learn More
    • Testimonials
    • Investments Talk! Video
    • Launch Press Release
    • News Center Press Release
  • Sponsors & Partners
    • Sponsors
    • Partners
  • Connect
    • Contact Us
    • Survey
    • IWV News
    • Share a Resource
  • Spoiler title
    Free GuideSubscribeClose
    Get a free 30 minute personalized guide to
    Invest With Values, after subscribing.
    * = required field

Training Myself to Look at My Portfolio Through a Gender Lens

November 17, 2015 By ImpactAlpha

women pick apple

I’ve been working on investing with a women and girls focus for a long time. And my husband has been working on his running for a long time. He’s an ultra-marathoner – a good one. He’s both a natural, and he works at it. What do these things have to do with each other? It’s about practising, training, working at it.  And… personal bests.

lens-640x480Lately I’ve been analysing my own portfolio, to see where gender lenses can be found.  That can mean investing in something that is directly about women and girls – like a women’s finance media company – or investing in something that has a strong women and girls impact but doesn’t call it out clearly.  Like a company working on tech for aging, or a company working on online psychological counselling. They don’t lead with gender. They lead with a problem to solve, a solution, a business proposition. But inside and around those companies, there are gender patterns all over the place.  These are investments that I made through my angel group in the UK – Clearly Social Angels.

I didn’t study women’s studies in school. I studied business and communications. So I don’t naturally have the background in gender analysis. I have to work at it.

Maybe there will be a soundtrack. Music to listen to while you’re upgrading your due diligence with a gender lens. Listen for it. Suzanne Biegel, The Women Effect

I’ve been practicing teaching, sharing a framework and a set of tools, for about a year, with the Criterion Institute, on how to upgrade any due diligence on an investment, with a gender lens. This means thinking about where gender patterns show up in our investments, consciously or unconsciously, and how we act upon them – asking, how do any investors act on those patterns? How are those patterns situated in a context and geography, an industry or a sector?  If I’m looking at an energy investment in East Africa, or an education investment in East London — what questions could I be asking that would make me a smarter investor? How can we systematise this so that others can do it, so that we can all practice this, try it, test it, and see what comes out?  Criterion’s recent report The State of the Field of Gender Lens Investing sets a brilliant context for this.

My husband has become a really good ultra marathoner. He’s paying attention to his fitness, his nutrition, the weather, the road, his shoes, and his sleep in a whole new way.  He can’t go back to being not-conscious of these things and he sees the impact this consciousness.  It didn’t happen overnight. He has been training, upwards of 40 miles a week, for four years.  He has a special watch and he has apps.  He is part of a running crew.  He has markers to point to success – often in the context of races and competitions or “PB’s – personal bests.” His friends celebrate each other’s success.  They talk through what didn’t work. Then they go out and do it again.  Once in a while someone gets hurt. But then they get better. They are all in. Some just run. Some analyse everything: to get better.

So I go back to gender lens investing: to women and girls. I’m practising looking at gender, at gender patterns, and where the women and girls show up – looking at where they don’t show up, at and where there is positive or negative or neutral impact from where and how they do show up, in context of an investment. And now I can’t not notice it.

Like running, like any field of endeavour, with a goal, we need to practise. We need to build up muscle. Find the right shoes.  Find the right soundtrack.  Notice the weather, the terrain.  Maybe get a few cool apps. Sometimes, get a coach. And there’s context: what is it like in Nairobi versus New York?  Who is in the mix?  Can we see different outcomes?

People are writing about the impact of women on boards, or gender balanced teams. They are noticing that some women are better than some men in certain roles – and where society has a mismatch around those patterns. It’s not just an intellectual exercise. It has massive implications. When we have the number of issues that we do in the world where fortune disproportionately favours one gender, or disadvantages another, it can be, literally, fatal. Or conversely, it can lift people up; it can lift up entire economies.

Like becoming an excellent runner, you don’t just wake up one day and do this well.  I get down on myself sometimes for not having it better figured out. I’m a reasonably smart person. Why don’t I have this down yet?  But everyone has to start somewhere. And this field is young.  We have a lot to learn. It’s not just me.

One of the places I’m starting is within my angel investing. Another is in looking at any new fund or investment vehicle I’m evaluating. I’m asking new questions. I’m testing the answers. I’m looking for patterns and data. I’m saying – how does this look in a mountain run versus a country lane run?

I’m seeking out domain expertise and I’m sharing my questions with others to practice.  And, I’m continuing my work with Joy Anderson, and Criterion Institute, and Wharton Business School (where I’m an alum and sit on the Global Social Impact Investing Advisory Council), and Said Business School – where Linda Scott is leading from an academic point of view, and many other people and organisations, to see how we can make this a process and a field of expertise to share.

I’ve tested it at SoCap and with European Venture Philanthropy Association.  And maybe, there will be a soundtrack.  Music to listen to while you’re upgrading your due diligence with a gender lens.  Listen for it. Or send me your song suggestions.  And stay tuned for more info on my new initiative: Women Effect. It’s all connected.

Disclosure

This post is part of the conversation around the new report,  “State of the Field of Gender Lense Investing” and is published in partnership with Criterion Institute. Join the conversation by sending your thoughts to info@impactalpha.com.

Share This:

This post was originally published on ImpactAlpha.com


home-compass-croppedVisit the Invest With Values - Resource Directory to access leading investor information, opportunities, organizations, events, groups and tools.

Filed Under: -Impact Investing

About ImpactAlpha

Led by David Bank, formerly of The Wall Street Journal, ImpactAlpha is establishing a major new media brand for the growing number of people who believe our most pressing social and environmental challenges represent the biggest business opportunities of the 21st century. ImpactSpace is the world’s largest open impact database of ventures, funds, deals, people and organizations.
Learn more about ImpactAlpha and their articles.

News Search

Sponsors

Talgra RSF RSF Social Finance logo Trillium MicroVest MicroVest LOCUS LOCUS Impact Investing CFC capital for change

Events

All News by Category

Take the Survey

Why do you care about money and investing?
  • Home
  • Directory
  • News Center
  • Sponsors & Partners
  • About
  • Connect
  • Google Plus
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Linkedin

Copyright © 2026 • Invest with Values • All Rights Reserved • 914-230-0741 · info(at)investwithvalues.com
Created and Managed by Brian Kaminer of Talgra LLC

Disclaimer: The information shared through investwithvalues.com has been provided by Talgra, LLC (“Talgra”). No representation or warranty, expressed or implied is made by Talgra, the sponsors, partners or contributors as to the accuracy or completeness of the information contained herein. The website is for educational and informational purposes only and is subject to change. This does not constitute an offer or a solicitation to purchase or sell any security, and nothing herein should be construed as such. The opinions represented in this directory are those of Talgra and should be considered in conjunction with advice from a professional advisor in the context of your particular investment situation. The specific investments included in this website are examples of investments that can be made in each of the different investment categories and are not recommendations to purchase any individual security or investment vehicle.